test.support module now imports the platform and subprocess modules
lazily to reduce the number of modules imported by
"import test.support".
With this change, the threading module is no longer imported
indirectly by "import test.support".
Use sys.version rather than platform.machine() to detect the Windows
ARM32 buildbot.
check_impl_detail() of test.support now uses sys.implementation.name,
instead of platform.python_implementation().lower(). This change
prepares test.support to import the platform module lazily.
If ctypes fails to convert the result of a callback or if a ctypes
callback function raises an exception, sys.unraisablehook is now
called with an exception set. Previously, the error was logged into
stderr by PyErr_Print().
```
D:\a\cpython\cpython\Modules\_zoneinfo.c(903,52): warning C4267: '=': conversion from 'size_t' to 'unsigned int', possible loss of data [D:\a\cpython\cpython\PCbuild\_zoneinfo.vcxproj]
D:\a\cpython\cpython\Modules\_zoneinfo.c(904,44): warning C4267: '=': conversion from 'size_t' to 'unsigned int', possible loss of data [D:\a\cpython\cpython\PCbuild\_zoneinfo.vcxproj]
D:\a\cpython\cpython\Modules\_zoneinfo.c(1772,31): warning C4244: '=': conversion from 'ssize_t' to 'uint8_t', possible loss of data [D:\a\cpython\cpython\PCbuild\_zoneinfo.vcxproj]
```
hashlib.compare_digest uses OpenSSL's CRYPTO_memcmp() function
when OpenSSL is available.
Note: The _operator module is a builtin module. I don't want to add
libcrypto dependency to libpython. Therefore I duplicated the wrapper
function and added a copy to _hashopenssl.c.
ctypes now raises an ArgumentError when a callback
is invoked with more than 1024 arguments.
The ctypes module allocates arguments on the stack in
ctypes_callproc() using alloca(), which is problematic
when large numbers of arguments are passed. Instead
of a stack overflow, this commit raises an ArgumentError
if more than 1024 parameters are passed.
Convert Py_REFCNT() and Py_SIZE() macros to static inline functions.
They cannot be used as l-value anymore: use Py_SET_REFCNT() and
Py_SET_SIZE() to set an object reference count and size.
Replace &Py_SIZE(self) with &((PyVarObject*)self)->ob_size
in arraymodule.c.
This change is backward incompatible on purpose, to prepare the C API
for an opaque PyObject structure.
* Fix outdated __int__ and nb_int references in comments
* Also update C-API documentation
* Add back missing 'method' word
* Remove .. deprecated notices
Reason: the link `ftp://invisible-island.net/ncurses//5.9/ncurses-5.9-20120616-patch.sh.bz2` is dead, which prevents `Mac/BuildScript/build-installer.py` from completing. Looks like the host of the FTP server was changed to `ftp.invisible-island.net`, thus this proposal.
Signed-off-by: oleg.hoefling <oleg.hoefling@gmail.com>
These are like keywords but they only work in context; they are not reserved except when there is an exact match.
This would enable things like match statements without reserving `match` (which would be bad for the `re.match()` function and probably lots of other places).
Automerge-Triggered-By: @gvanrossum
The 'extra' argument is not always used by custom logger adapters. For
example:
```python
class IndentAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
def process(self, msg, kwargs):
indent = kwargs.pop(indent, 1)
return ' ' * indent + msg, kwargs
```
It is cleaner and friendlier to default the 'extra' argument to None
instead of either forcing the subclasses of LoggerAdapter to pass a None
value directly or to override the constructor.
This change is backward compatible because existing calls to
`LoggerAdapter.__init__` are already passing a value for the second
argument.
Automerge-Triggered-By: @vsajip
When a `SyntaxError` in the expression part of a fstring is found,
the filename attribute of the `SyntaxError` is always `<fstring>`.
With this commit, it gets changed to always have the name of the file
the fstring resides in.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
The scripts in `Tools/peg_generator/scripts` mostly assume that
`ast.parse` and `compile` use the old parser, since this was the
state of things, while we were developing them. They need to be
updated to always use the correct parser. `_peg_parser` is being
extended to support both parsing and compiling with both parsers.
:mod:`hashlib` no longer falls back to builtin hash implementations when
OpenSSL provides a hash digest and the algorithm is blocked by security
policy.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>